BOGOR, Indonesia (6 March 2014) — Comprehensive U.N. anti-poverty targets established in 2000 have done much to advance and empower rural women by making gender parity an integral part of international discussions on development.

However, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) appear to have fallen short in addressing the plight of rural women in an often-overlooked area: energy access.

The reliance on burning biomass such as fuelwood, animal dung and crop waste for household energy creates risks and hardships that fall inordinately on women — from collection to use in the home.

As these hardships become more evident, one researcher is urging for this issue to be addressed in ongoing negotiations over the next global development framework, the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The SDGs will succeed the MDGs, which are set to expire in 2015.

“Women in the developing world juggle a vast amount of challenges,” saidCaroline Ochieng, a research fellow at the Stockholm Environment Institute who studies household energy access in developing countries. “International Women’s Day (8 March) provides an opportunity to remind policymakers that the international community must help raise them up.”

The MDGs helped women make some gains over the past 14 years. MDG3 aims to promote gender equality by encouraging the empowerment of girls and women through improved access to education, work, and greater participation in decision-making. A 2013 U.N. report said that in 2011, 40 out of every 100 wage-earning jobs in the non-agricultural sector were held by women, an improvement since 1990, when they held only 35 out of every 100 jobs.

Other crosscutting MDGs have also benefited the welfare of women. MDG2 stipulates that all children should have access to education; by 2013 the U.N. declared that globally there were 95 literate young women for every 100 literate young men compared with 90 women in 1990. And under guidelines set by MDG5, maternal mortality rates have declined by almost half since 1990, according to the U.N. report.

However, the MDGs do not address the fact that more than 2.6 billion people — almost 40 percent of the global population — rely on traditional biomass fuels for cooking, according to statistics from the 2013 World Energy Outlook. This has hindered progress in reaching MDG targets, including those that are gender-related, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

DANGEROUS TASK

For many rural women, the daily task of cooking is suffused with risk.

Women exposed to heavy indoor cooking smoke, for example, are three times as likely to suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and are at a higher risk of death from lung cancer than women who use cleaner fuels, according to WHO.

The recent global burden of disease report shows that household air pollution from burning of solid fuels is among the top three leading risk factors for disease. Nearly 2 million people each year die prematurely from illness caused by indoor air pollution from solid fuel use, according to WHO.

In biomass-dependent households, collecting fuel is often the responsibility of women, a physical hardship requiring a major time commitment that restricts their capacity to advance in many parts of the world to advance.

Introducing solutions such as improved cookstoves requires consideration of complex economic, social and cultural challenges

Caroline Ochieng

A study in rural India showed that women spend up to 50 hours a week collecting fuelwood, leaving limited time to engage in gainful economic activities, child care or other social activities. Young girls engaged in gathering fuel miss out on educational opportunities, and are vulnerable to gender violence — particularly in areas of conflict — when collecting fuel.

In developing countries, estimates indicate that about 730 million tons of biomass are burned each year, emitting soot and carbon dioxide that contribute to climate change and drive deforestation and the loss of ecosystem services that forests support.